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This text is taken from"The Ending Of Time"
J. Krishnamurti& Dr. David BohmCopyright 1985 by KFA
P.O. Box 1560,Ojai, California 93023
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"This book has been prepared from Dialogues that took place between
J. Krishnamurti and Professor David Bohm in America and in England
between April and September, 1980. On certain occasions other people
were present, and their occasional contributions to the discussions,
unless otherwise stated, are attributed to 'Questioner' rather than
to individuals by name."
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"CAN PERSONAL PROBLEMS BE SOLVED, AND FRAGMENTATION
END?"
K: We have cultivated a mind that can solve almost any technological
problem. But apparently human problems have never been solved. Human
beings are drowned by their problems; the problems of communication,
knowledge, of relationships, the problems of heaven and hell; the whole
human existence, has become a vast, complex problem. And apparently
throughout history it has been like this. In spite of his knowledge,
in spite of his centuries of evolution, man has never been free of
problems.
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David Bohm: Yes, of insoluble problems.
K: I question if human problems are insoluble.
DB: I mean, as they are put now.
K: As they are now, of course, these problems have become incredibly
complex and insoluble. No politician, scientist, or philosopher is
going to solve them, even through wars and so on! So why have human
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beings throughout the world not been able to resolve the daily problems
of life? What are the things that prevent the complete solution of these
problems? Is it that we have never turned our minds to it? Is it
because we spend all our days, and probably half the night, in thinking
about technological problems so that we have no time for the other?
DB: That is partly so. Many people feel that the other should take
care of itself.
K: But why? I am asking in this dialogue whether it is possible to
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have no human problems at all -- only technological problems, which
can be solved. But human problems seem insoluble. Is it because of
our education, our deep-rooted traditions, that we accept things as
they are?
DB: Well, that is certainly part of it. These problems accumulate as
civilization gets older, and people keep on accepting things which make
problems. For example, there are now far more nations in the world than
there used to be, and each one creates new problems.
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K: Of course.
DB: If you go back in time...
K: ...a tribe becomes a nation...
DB: And then the group must fight its neighbour.
K: Men use this marvelous technology to kill each other. But we are
talking about problems of relationships, problems of lack of freedom,
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this sense of constant uncertainty and fear, the struggle to work for
a livelihood for the rest of constant uncertainty and fear, the struggle
to work for a livelihood for the rest of one's life. The whole thing
seems so extraordinarily wrong.
DB: I think people have lost sight of that. Generally speaking they
accept the situation in which they find themselves, and try to make
the best of it, trying to solve some small problems to alleviate their
circumstances. They wouldn't even look at this whole situation
seriously.
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K: But the religious people have created a tremendous problem for
man.
DB: Yes. They are trying to solve problems too. I mean everybody is
caught up in his own little fragment, solving whatever he thinks he can
solve, but it all adds up to chaos.
K: To chaos and wars! That is what we are saying. We live in chaos.
But I want to find out if I can live without a single problem for the
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rest of my life. Is that possible?
DB: Well, I wonder if we should even call these things problems, you
see. A problem would be something that is reasonably solvable. If you
put the problem of how to achieve a certain result, then that presupposes
that you can reasonably find a way to do it technologically. But
psychologically, the problem cannot be looked at in that way; to propose
a result you have to achieve, and then find a way to do it.
K: What is the root of all this? What is the cause of all this human
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chaos? I am trying to come to it from a different angle, to discover
whether there is an ending to problems. You see, personally, I refuse
to have problems.
DB: Somebody might argue with you about that and say that maybe you
are not challenged with something.
K: I was challenged the other day about something very, very serious.
That is not a problem.
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DB: Then it is a matter of clarification. Part of the difficulty
is clarification of the language.
K: Clarification, not only of language, but of relationship and action.
A problem arose the other day which involved lots of people, and a
certain action had to be taken. But to me personally it was not a
problem.
DB: We have to make it clear what you mean, because without an example,
I don't know.
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K: I mean by a problem something that has to be resolved, something
you worry about; something you are questioning, and endlessly concerned
with. Also doubts and uncertainties, and having to take some kind of
action which you will regret at the end.
DB: Let's begin with the technical problem where the idea first arose.
You have a challenge, something which needs to be done, and you say that
is a problem.
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K: Yes, that is generally called a problem.
DB: Now the word problem is based on the idea of putting forth
something--a possible solution--and then trying to achieve it.
K: Or, I have a problem but I don't know how to deal with it.
DB: If you have a problem and you have no idea how to deal with it...
K: ...then I go round asking people for advice, and getting more and
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more confused.
DB: This would already be a change from the simple idea of a technical
problem, where you usually have some notion of what to do.
K: I wonder if we do? Surely technical problems are fairly simple.
DB: They often bring challenges requiring us to go very deeply and
change our ideas. With a technical problem, we generally know what
we have to do to solve it. For example, if there is lack of food, what
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we have to do is to find ways and means of producing more. But with
a psychological problem, can we do the same?
K: The is the point. How do we deal with this thing?
DB: Well, what kind of problem shall we discuss?
K: Any problem which arises in human relationships.
DB: Let's say that people cannot agree; they fight each other
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constantly.
K: Yes, let's take that for a simple thing. It seems to be almost
impossible for a group of people to think together, to have the same out-
look and attitude. I don't mean copying each other, of course. But each
person puts his opinion forward and is contradicted by another--which
goes on all the time, everywhere.
DB: All right. So can we say that our problem is to work together,
to think together?
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K: Work together, think together, co-operate without the involvement
of monetary issues.
DB: That is another question, whether people will work together if
they are highly paid.
K: So how do we solve this problem? In a group, all of us are offering
different opinions, and we don't meet each other at all. And it seems
almost impossible to give up one's opinions.
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DB: Yes, that is one of the difficulties, but I am not sure that you
can regard it as a problem, and ask, what shall we do to give up
opinions.
K: No, of course. But that is a fact. So observing that, and seeing
the necessity that we should all come together, people still cannot
give up their opinions, their ideas, their own experiences and
conclusions.
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DB: Often it may not seem to them like an opinion, but the truth.
K: Yes, they would call it fact. But what can man do about these
divisions? We see the necessity of working together--not for some ideal,
belief, some principle or some god. In various countries throughout the
world, and even in the United Nations they are not working together.
DB: Some people might say that we not only have opinions, but self-
interest. If two people have conflicting self-interests, there is no
way, as long as they maintain their attachment to these, that they can
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work together. So how do we break into this?
K: If you point out to me that we must work together, and show me the
importance of it, then I also see that it is important. But I can't do
it!
DB: That's the point. It is not enough even to see that cooperation
is important, and to have the intention of achieving this. With this
inability there is a new factor coming in. Why is it that we cannot
carry out our intentions.?
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K: One can give many reasons for that, but those causes and reasons and
and explanations don't solve the problem. We come back to the same
-- what will make a human mind change? We see that change is necessary,
and yet are incapable or unwilling to change. What factor -- what new
factor -- is necessary for this?
DB: Well, I feel it is the ability to observe deeply whatever it is
that is holding the person and preventing him from changing.
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K: So is the new factor attention?
DB: Yes, that is what I meant. But also, we have to consider what
kind of attention.
DB: It may have many meanings to different people.
K: Of course, as usual, there are so many opinions!
Where there is attention, there is no problem. Where there is
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inattention, every difficulty arises. Now without making attention
itself into a problem, what do we mean by it? Can we understand it,
not verbally, not intellectually, but deeply, in our blood? Obviously
attention is not concentration. It is not an endeavour, an experience,
a struggle to be attentive. You must show me the nature of attention,
which is that when there is attention, there is no centre from which
'I' attend.
DB: Yes, but that is the difficult thing.
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K: Don't let's make a problem of it.
DB: I mean that people have been trying this for a long time. I think
that there is first of all some difficulty in understanding what is
meant by attention, because of the content of thought itself. When
a person is looking at it, he may think he is attending.
K: No, in that state of attention there is no thought.
DB: But how do you stop thought then? You see, while thinking is
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going on, there is an impression of attention -- which is not attention.
But one thinks, one supposes that one is paying attention.
K: When one supposes one is paying attention, that is not it.
DB: So how do we communicate the true meaning of attention?
K: Or would you say rather that to find out what is attention, we
should discuss what is inattention?
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DB: Yes.
K: And through negation come to the positive. When I am inattentive,
what takes place? In my inattentiveness, I feel lonely, depressed,
anxious, and so on.
DB: The mind begins to break up and go into confusion.
K: Fragmentation takes place. And in my lack of attention, I identifymyself with many other things.
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DB: Yes, and it may be pleasant -- but it can be painful too.
K: I find, later on, that what was pleasing becomes pain.
So all that is a movement in which there is no attention. Right?
Are we getting anywhere?
DB: I don't know.
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K: I feel that attention is the real solution to all this -- a mind
which is really attentive, which has understood the nature of inattention
and moves away from it!
DB: But first, what is the nature of inattention?
K: Indolence, negligence, self-concern, self-contradiction -- all that
is the nature of inattention.
DB: Yes. You see, a person who has self-concern may feel that he
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is attending but he is simply concerned with himself.
K: Yes. If there is self-contradiction in me, and I pay attention
to it in order not to be self-contradictory, that is not attention.
DB: But can we make this clear, because ordinarily one might think
that this is attention.
K: No, it is not. It is merely a process of thought, which says, 'I amthis, I must not be that'.
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DB: So you are saying that this attempt to become, is not attention.
K: Yes, that's right. Because the psychological becoming breeds
inattention.
DB: Yes.
K: Isn't it very difficult, Sir, to be free of becoming? That isthe root of it. To end becoming.
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DB: Yes. There is no attention, and that is why these problems are
there.
K: Yes, and when you point that out, the paying attention also becomes
a problem.
DB: The difficulty is that the mind plays tricks, and in trying to
deal with this, it does the very same thing again.
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K: Of course. Can the mind, which is so full of knowledge,
self-importance, self-contradiction, and all the rest of it, come to
a point where it finds itself psychologically unable to move?
DB: There is nowhere for it to move.
K: What would I say to a person who has come to that point? I come
to you. I am full of this confusion, anxiety, and sense of despair,
not only for myself but for the world. I come to that point, and Iwant to break through it. So it becomes a problem to me.
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DB: Then we are back; there is again an attempt to become, you see.
K: Yes. That is what I want to get at. So is that the root of all
this? The desire to become?
DB: Well, it must be close to it.
K: So how do I look, without the movement of becoming, at this wholecomplex issue of myself?
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DB: It seems that one hasn't looked at the whole. We did not look
at the whole of becoming, when you said, 'How can I pay attention?'
Part of it seemed to slip out, and became the observer. Right?
K: Psychological becoming has been the curse of all this. A poor man
want to be rich, and a rich man wants to be richer, it is all the time
this movement of becoming, both outwardly and inwardly. And though it
brings a great deal of pain and sometimes pleasure, this sense ofbecoming, fufilling, achieving psychologically, has made my life into all
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that it is. Now I realize that, but I can't stop it.
DB: Why can't I stop it?
K: Let's go into that. Partly I am concerned in becoming because there
is a reward at the end of it; also I am avoiding pain or punishment. And
in that cycle I am caught. That is probably one of the reasons why the
mind keeps on trying to become something. And the other perhaps is deep
rooted anxiety or fear that if I don't become something, I am lost. I amuncertain and insecure, so the mind has accepted these illusions and
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says, I cannot end that process of becoming.
DB: But why doesn't the mind end it? Also we have to go into the
question of being trapped by these illusions.
K: How do you convince me that I am caught in an illusion? You can't,
unless I see it myself. I cannot see it because my illusion is so
strong. That illusion has been nurtured, cultivated by religion, by
the family, and so on. It is so deeply rooted that I refuse to letit go. That is what is taking place with a large number of people.
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They say, 'I want to do this but I cannot'. Now given that situation,
what are they to do? Will explanations, logic and all the various
contradictions, theories, help them? Obviously not.
DB: Because it all gets absorbed into the structure.
K: So what is the next thing?
DB: You see, if they say, 'I want to change', there is also the wishnot to change.
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K: Of course. The man who says, 'I want to change', has also at the
back of his mind, 'Really, why should I change?' They go together.
DB: So we have a contradiction.
K: I have lived in this contradiction, I have accepted it.
DB: But why should I have accepted it?
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K: Because it is a habit.
DB: But when the mind is healthy, it will not accept a contradiction
K: But our mind isn't healthy. The mind is so diseased, so corrupt,
so confused, that even though you point out all the dangers of this,
it refuses to see them.
So how do we help a man who is caught in this to see clearly the dangerof psychological becoming? Let's put it that way. Psychological
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becoming implies identification with a nation, a group and all that
business.
DB: Yes, holding to opinions.
K: Opinions and beliefs; I have had an experience, it gives me
satisfaction, I am going to hold on to it. How do you help me to be free
of all this? I hear your words -- they seem quite right, but I can't
move out of all that.
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I wonder if there is another factor, another way of communication, which
isn't based on words, knowledge, explanations and reward and punishment.
Is there another way of communicating? You see, in that too there is
danger. I am sure there is a way which is not verbal, analytical or
logical, which doesn't mean lack of sanity.
DB: Perhaps there is.
K: My mind has always communicated with another with words,
explanations and logic, or with suggestion. There must be another
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element which breaks through all that.
DB: It will break through the inability to listen.
K: Yes, the inability to listen, the inability to observe, to hear, and
so on. There must be a different method. I have met several men who
have been to a certain saint, and in his company they say all problems
are resolved. But when they go back to their daily life, they are back
in the old game.
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DB: There was no intelligence in it, you see.
K: That is the danger. That man, that saint, being quiet and non-
verbal in the presence of that saint they feel quiet, and think that
their problems are resolved.
DB: But this is still from the outside.
K: Of course. It is like going to church. In an ancient church, or
cathedral, you feel extraordinarily quiet. It is the atmosphere, the
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structure -- you know; the very atmosphere makes you feel quiet.
DB: Yes, it communicates what is meant by quietness, non-verbally.
K: That is nothing. It is like incense!
DB: It is superficial.
K: Utterly superficial; like incense, it evaporates! So we push all
that aside, and then what have we left? Not an outside agency, a god, or
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some saviour. What have I left? What is there that can be communicated,
which will break through the wall that human beings have built for
themselves?
Is it love? That word has become corrupted, loaded, dirty. But
cleansing that word, is love the factor that will break through this
clever analytical approach? Is love the element that is lacking?
DB: Well, we have to discuss it; perhaps people are somewhat chary of
that word.
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K: I am chary beyond words!
DB: And, therefore, as people resist listening, they will resist love
too.
K: That is why I said it is rather a risky word.
DB: We were saying the other day that love contains intelligence.
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K: Of course.
DB: Which is care as well; we mean by love that energy which also
contains intelligence and care; all that...
K: Now wait a minute: you have that quality and I am caught in my
misery, anxiety, etc., and you are trying to penetrate with that
intelligence this mass of darkness. How will you do it? Will that act?
If not, we human beings are lost. You follow, Sir? Therefore we have
invented Jesus, Buddha, Krishna -- images which have become meaningless,
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superficial and nonsensical.
So what shall I do? I think that is the other factor. Attention,
perception, intelligence and love -- you bring all this to me, and I
am incapable of receiving it. I say, 'It sounds nice; I feel it, but I
can't hold it'. I can't hold it, because the moment I go outside this
room, I am lost!
DB: That really is the problem.
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K: Yes, that is the real problem. Is love something outside, as
heaven -- and all that stuff is outside. Is love something outside,
which you bring to me, which you awaken in me, which you give me as
a gift -- or, in my darkness, illusion and suffering, is there that
quality? Obviously not, there can't be.
DB: Then where is it?
K: That's just it. Love is not yours or mine; it is not personal, not
something that belongs to anyone; love is not that.
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DB: Then where is it?
K: That's just it. Love is not yours or mine; it is not personal,
not something that belongs to anyone; love is not that.
DB: That is an important point. Similarly you were saying that
isolation does not belong to any one person, although we tend to think
of isolation as a personal problem.
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K: Of course. It is common ground for all of us. Also intelligence is
not personal.
DB: But again, that goes contrary to the whole of our thinking, you
see.
K: I know.
DB: Everybody says this person is intelligent, and that one is not. So
this may be one of the barriers to the whole thing, that behind the
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ordinary everyday thought there is deeper thought of mankind, but we
generally feel divided, and say these various qualities either belongto us, or they don't belong to us.
K: Quite. It is the fragmentary mind that invents all this.
DB: It has been invented, but we have picked it up verbally and non-
verbally, by implication, from childhood. Therefore it pervades, it is
the ground of our thoughts, of all our perceptions. So this has to
be questioned.
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K: We have questioned it -- that grief is not my grief, grief is human,and so on.
DB: But how are people to see that, because a person who is
experiencing grief feels that it is his personal grief?
K: I think it is partly because of our education, partly our society
and traditions.
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DB: But it is implicit in our whole way of thinking. Then we have to
jump out of that, you see.
K: Yes. To jump out of that becomes a problem, and then what am I to
do?
DB: Perhaps we can see that love is not personal.
K: Earth is not English earth, or French earth, earth is earth!
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DB: I was thinking of an example in physics: if the scientist or
chemist is studying an element such as sodium, he does not say it is hissodium, or that somebody else studies his sodium. And of course they
compare notes, etc.
K: Quite. Sodium is sodium.
DB: Sodium is sodium, universally. So we have to say that love is
love, universally.
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K: Yes. But you see my mind refuses to see that, because I am so
terribly personal, terribly concerned with 'me and my problems'. Irefuse to let that go. When you say sodium is sodium, it is very simple;
I can see that. But when you say to me that grief is common to all of
us, this is difficult.
DB: This can't be done with time, but it took quite a while for mankind
to realize that sodium is sodium, you see.
K: Is love something that is common to all of us?
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DB: Well, in so far as it exists, it has to be common.
K: Of course.
DB: It may not exist, but if it does, it has to be common.
K: I am not sure it does not exist. Compassion is not 'I am
compassionate'. Compassion is there, is something that is not 'me'.
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DB: If we say compassion is the same as sodium, it is universal. Then
every person's compassion is the same.
K: Compassion, love, and intelligence. You can't have compassion
without intelligence.
DB: So we say intelligence is universal too!
K: Obviously.
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DB: But we have methods of testing intelligence in particular people,
you see.
K: Oh, no.
DB: But perhaps that is all part of the thing that is getting in the
way?
K: Part of this divisive, fragmentary way of thinking.
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DB: Well, there may be holistic think, although we are not in it yet.
K: Then holistic thinking is not thinking; it is some other factor.
DB: Some other factor that we haven't gone into yet.
K: If love is common to all of us, why am I blind to it?
DB: I think partly because the mind boggles; it just refuses to
consider such a fantastic change of concept in a way of looking.
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K: But you said just now that sodium is sodium.
DB: You see, we have a lot of evidence for that in all sorts of
experiments, built up through a lot of work and experience. Now we
can't do that with love. You can't go into a laboratory and prove that
love is love.
K: Oh, no. Love isn't knowledge. Why does one's mind refuse to accept
a very obvious factor? Is it the fear of letting go my old values,
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standards and opinions?
DB: I think it is probably something deeper. It is hard to pin down,
but it isn't a simple thing, although what you suggest is a partial
explanation.
K: That is a superficial explanation, I know. Is it the deep rooted
anxiety, the longing to be totally secure?
DB: But that again is based on fragmentation
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K: Of course.
DB: If we accept that we are fragmented, we will inevitably want to
be totally secure, because being fragmented we are always in danger.
K: Is that the root of it? This urge, this demand, this longing to
be totally secure in our relationship with everything? To be certain?
Of course, there is complete security only in nothingness!
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DB: It is not the demand for security which is wrong, but thefragmentations. The fragment cannot possibly be secure.
K: That is right. Like each country trying to be secure, it is not
secure.
DB: But complete security could be achieved is all the countries got
together. The way you have put it sounds as if we should live eternally
in insecurity, you see.
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K: No, we have made that very clear.
DB: It makes sense to ask for security, but we are going about it the
wrong way. How do we convey that love is universal, not personal, to a
man who has lived completely in the narrow groove of personal
achievement? It seems the first point is, will he question his narrow,
'unique' personality?
K: People question it; they see the logic of what we are discussing,
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yet, curiously, people who are very serious in these matters, have tried
to find the wholeness of life through starvation, through torture --you know, every kind of way. But you can't apprehend or perceive or
be the whole through torture. So what shall we do? Let's say I have
a brother who refuses to see all this. And as I have great affection
for him, I want him to move out of fragmentation. And I have tried
to communicate with him verbally, and sometimes non-verbally, by a
gesture or by a look; but all this is still from the outside. And
perhaps that is the reason why he resists. Can I point out to my brother
that in himself this flame can be awakened? It means he must listen
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to me, but my brother refuses to listen.
DB: It seems that there are some actions which are not possible.
If a person is caught in a certain thought such as fragmentation, then
he can't change it, because there are a lot of other thoughts behind
it.
K: Of course.
DB: Thoughts he doesn't know. He is not actually free to take this
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action because of the whole structure of thought that holds him.
K: So how do I help -- I use that word with great caution -- my
brother? What is the root of all this? We talk of his becoming
aware -- but all that is verbal; it can be explained in different ways
-- the cause, the effect, and all the rest of it. After I explain all
this, he says, 'You have left me where I am'. And my intelligence, my
affection, says 'I can't let him go'. Which means, am I putting pressure
on him?
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I am not using any kind of pressure, or reward; my responsibility is
that I can't let another human being go. It is not the responsibility
of duty and all that dreadful stuff. But it is the responsibility of
intelligence to say all that to him. There is a tradition in India
that one who is called the Maitreya Buddha took a vow that he would
not become the ultimate Buddha until he had liberated other human beings
too.
DB: Altogether?
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K: Yes. You see, the tradition hasn't changed anything. How can
one, if one has that intelligence, that compassion, that love, which
is not of a country, a person, an ideal or a saviour, transmit that
purity to another? By living with him, talking to him? You see it
can all become mechanical.
DB: Would you say that this question has never really been solved.?
K: I think so. But we must solve it, you follow? It has not been
solved, but our intelligence says, solve it. No, I think intelligence
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doesn't say solve it; intelligence says these are the facts, and perhaps
some will capture it.
DB: Well, it seems to me that there are really two factors: one is the
preparation by reason to show that it all makes sense; and from there
possibly some will capture it.
K: We have done that, Sir. The map has been laid out, and he has
seen it very clearly; the conflicts, the misery, the confusion, the
insecurity, the becoming. All that is extremely clear. But at the
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d f h h h i b k h b i i O h h h
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end of the chapter he is back at the beginning. Or perhaps he has a
glimpse of it, and his craving to capture that glimpse and hold on to
it becomes a memory. You follow? And all the nightmare begins!
In showing him the map very clearly, can we also point out to him
something much deeper than that, which is love? He is groping after
all this. But the weight of body, brain, tradition -- all that draws
him back. So it is a constant battle -- and I think the whole thing
is so wrong.
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DB Wh t i ?
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DB: What is wrong?
K: The way we are living.
DB: Many people must see that by now.
K: We have asked whether man has taken a wrong turning, and entered
into a valley where there is no escape. That can't be so; that is too
depressing, too appalling.
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DB I thi k l i ht bj t t th t Th f t th t
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DB: I think some people might object to that. The very fact that
it is appalling does not make it untrue. I think you would have to
give some stronger reason why you feel that to be untrue.
K: Oh, yes.
DB: Do you perceive in human nature some possibility of a real change?
K: Of course. Otherwise everything would be meaningless; we'd be
monkeys, machines. You see, the faculty for radical change is attributed
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to some outside agency and therefore we look to that and get lost in
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to some outside agency, and therefore we look to that and get lost in
that. If we don't look to anybody, and are completely free from
dependence, then solitude is common to all of us. It is not an
isolation. It is an obvious fact that when you see all this -- the
stupidity and unreality of fragmentation and division -- you are
naturally alone. That sense of aloneness is common, and not personal.
DB: Yes, but the ordinary sense of loneliness is personal in the sense
that each person feels it is his own.
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K: Loneliness is not solitude; it is not aloneness
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K: Loneliness is not solitude; it is not aloneness.
DB: I think all the fundamental things are universal, and therefore you
are saying that when the mind goes deep, it comes into something
universal.
K: That's right.
DB: Whether or not you call it absolute.
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K: The problem is to make the mind go very very deeply into itself
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K: The problem is to make the mind go very, very deeply into itself.
DB: Yes. Now there is something that has occurred to me. When we
start with a particular problem our mind is very shallow, then we go
to something more general. The word 'general' has the same root as
'to generate'; the genus is the common generation...
K: To generate, of course.
DB: When we go to something more general, a depth is generated. But
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going on still further the general is still limited because it is
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going on, still further, the general is still limited because it is
thought.
K: Quite right. But to go profoundly, requires not only tremendous
courage, but the sense of constantly pursuing the same stream.
DB: Well, that is not quite diligence; that is still too limited,
right?
K: Yes, diligence is too limited. It goes with a religious mind in
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a sense that it is diligence in its action, its thoughts and so on,
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a sense that it is diligence in its action, its thoughts and so on,
but it is still limited. If the mind can go from the particular to
the general and from the general...
DB: ...to the absolute, to the universal. But many people would say
that is very abstract, and has nothing to do with daily
K: I know. Yet it is the most practical thing, and not an abstraction.
DB: In fact, it is the particular that is the abstraction.
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K: Absolutely. The particular is the most dangerous.
DB: It is also the most abstract, because you only get to the
particular by abstracting.
K: Of course, of course.
DB: I think that this may be part of the problem. People feel they
want something that really affects us in daily life; they don't just
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want to get themselves lost in talking, therefore, they say, 'All these
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g g, , y y,
vapid generalities don't interest us'.
It is true that what we are discussing must work in daily life, but
daily life does not contain the solution of its problems.
K: No. The daily life is the general and the particular.
DB: The human problems which arise in daily life cannot be solved
there.
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K: From the particular, it is necessary to move to the general; from
the general to move still deeper, and there perhaps is the purity of
what is called compassion, love and intelligence. But that means giving
your mind, your heart, your whole being to this enquiry.
We have talked now for a long time, I think we have reached somewhere.
[27 September 1980, Brockwood Park, Hampshire]